TY - JOUR
T1 - Why lichens are bad biomonitors of ozone pollution?
AU - Bertuzzi, Stefano
AU - Davies, Linda
AU - Power, Sally A.
AU - Tretiach, Mauro
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - The combined effects of water availability and ozone (O3) on chlorophyll a fluorescence (ChlaF) were studied in three epiphytic lichens selected for their different ecology. The samples were exposed in open top chambers (OTCs) under different watering regimes with O3 AOT40 in the range 0–50,000 ppb. Further samples were exposed in a nearby wood, as controls. ChlaF measurements were taken before exposure, after 3- and 6-week exposure and after a subsequent 2-day recovery period to verify the long-term effects of O3 exposure. All species tolerated the pollutant well. However, there was a strong influence associated with the mode of exposure: the Chl1aF emission remained steady over time in the controls, whereas it varied significantly in chamber-exposed samples, with a strong decrease of Fv/Fm in non-watered and morning-watered samples, and a small decrease in evening-watered samples. Chl1 F emission characteristics were also influenced by the weather conditions of the day preceding measurements, with some species-specific differences possibly related to species ecology. The ozone-tolerance of lichens is thoroughly discussed on the basis of the cellular mechanisms that allow these organisms to over-come the oxidative burst associated with the cycles of dehydration–rehydration typical of poikilohydrous organisms.
AB - The combined effects of water availability and ozone (O3) on chlorophyll a fluorescence (ChlaF) were studied in three epiphytic lichens selected for their different ecology. The samples were exposed in open top chambers (OTCs) under different watering regimes with O3 AOT40 in the range 0–50,000 ppb. Further samples were exposed in a nearby wood, as controls. ChlaF measurements were taken before exposure, after 3- and 6-week exposure and after a subsequent 2-day recovery period to verify the long-term effects of O3 exposure. All species tolerated the pollutant well. However, there was a strong influence associated with the mode of exposure: the Chl1aF emission remained steady over time in the controls, whereas it varied significantly in chamber-exposed samples, with a strong decrease of Fv/Fm in non-watered and morning-watered samples, and a small decrease in evening-watered samples. Chl1 F emission characteristics were also influenced by the weather conditions of the day preceding measurements, with some species-specific differences possibly related to species ecology. The ozone-tolerance of lichens is thoroughly discussed on the basis of the cellular mechanisms that allow these organisms to over-come the oxidative burst associated with the cycles of dehydration–rehydration typical of poikilohydrous organisms.
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/542597
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2013.05.023
DO - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2013.05.023
M3 - Article
SN - 1470-160X
VL - 34
SP - 391
EP - 397
JO - Ecological Indicators
JF - Ecological Indicators
ER -